the local
> drive. Then things really slow down. This will happen more quickly if a
> web browser is running concurrently. In Windows open the Task Manager and
> look under performance to see how your machine is doing.
>
> David Carlson
>
> On Sun, Nov 17, 2019 at 8:14 PM M. Riz
Hello all,
I am using the import transactions feature to import sales data into
gnucash.
This works brilliantly. If you do it once then gnucash recognizes the same
account descriptions with subsequent imports and automatically remaps
correctly.
Currently I have two sources of sales data (e-comme
elative to the file size
>
> Kind regards, Greg Feneis
> (Pixel 3)
>
>
> On Sun, Nov 17, 2019, 17:49 M. Rizwan Muzzammil
> wrote:
>
> > Thanks for your replyI am using the default file types. Does it make
> a
> > difference if I c
how can it be done?
On Sun, Nov 17, 2019, 5:11 AM Colin Law wrote:
> On Sat, 16 Nov 2019 at 18:14, M. Rizwan Muzzammil
> wrote:
> > ...
> > My accounts have a large number of transactions in them.
> >
> > This seems to slow the program down, and it take a minute or
ansactions it is easier to fine tune
> your work method to minimize the lags.
>
> On Sat, Nov 16, 2019 at 12:14 PM M. Rizwan Muzzammil
> wrote:
>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> New user of GNU cash here.
>>
>> My accounts have a large number of transactions in
Hi all,
New user of GNU cash here.
My accounts have a large number of transactions in them.
This seems to slow the program down, and it take a minute or so to open it
each time.
Would there be a way to archive older previous year transactions so that
the program runs faster?
Thanks very much i